Step 3: Now we make the legs! Make a series of three tubes for each leg, each thinner than the last, but all the same length. They should connect end to end. The first set of legs goes on the head, just next to the fang.s

Step 4: Make another set of legs in the same way, with a series of three tubes, each one thinner than the last, but the same length! These should start just under the first set of legs you have already drawn.

Step 6: The last set of legs will consist of the same three segment pattern of smaller and smaller tubes, but these should be connected to the very middle of the body, on its sides. These should droop down a bit. There you have it! You've drawn you've drawn a black widow! Did you know: one Black widow bit isn't deadly to people! That's because doctors have made really good medicine for them.

Interesting Facts about Black Widow Spiders

Black widow spiders are arachnids, which are animals that have a skeleton on the outside of their body, eight legs, and a segmented body. The name “black widow” comes from the fact that females usually eat males after they mate.

Did You Know?

Female black widow spiders lay up to 400 eggs at a time. The eggs are in sacs that are attached to the mother’s web.

Black widow spiders are 15 times more poisonous than a rattlesnake, but they rarely attack humans. They are the most poisonous spider in North America.

Black widow spiders live alone, and they only pair up when they are mating.

Despite their name, male black widow spiders are gray or brown with red spots. Female black widow spiders are indeed black, and they have a reddish orange hourglass-shaped marking on their abdomen.

The average lifespan of black widow spiders is one to three years.

Just like other spiders, black widow spiders weave webs to catch their food, which are usually insects and other arachnids. Their webs are typical low to the ground and in dark places. Black widow spiders have an oil-like substance on their legs to prevent them from sticking to their own web.